314 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
314 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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THE REAPER
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by Gay Bost
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Did you ever meet someone that changed your life? Sure you have;
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we all have. I mean one of those people you meet, see a few times and
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never see again. After they're gone you realize they left a deep
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impression. In my life it was Maggie. But maybe I'd better start
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from the beginning.
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I was looking for ... something. Like the song says 'everybody's
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looking for something'. I was looking for something special.
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Maggie was something else.
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Her first words to me were, "I like to know what makes people tick.
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It's a Time thing." Her first question was "Why do you hate cats?"
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I've never hated cats. They fascinate me. Dogs whimper and go belly
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up. I only killed one dog. I felt dirty for weeks. But cats! Cats
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fight you to the last breath. They twitch and dig their claws in like
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they want to take you with them to hell. It's a rush.
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I told her I loved to look into cats' eyes. I didn't tell her when.
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I met her online. Women think you're *safe* if they meet you online.
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I don't know why; they just do. We talked for weeks before I asked if
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she'd like to get together for a cup of coffee. She was alone,
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single, far from family and new to the city. She had two cats and a
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10 gallon aquarium. She wasn't desperately lonely, but she could use
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a friend. Just the girl for me.
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I know what you're thinking. I do. You're thinking I must be some
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kind of no-win nerd to have to pick girls up on a computer. Well, sit
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back, bud. It's a Way. And it works. For what I need it works
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great. The cash outlay is minimal for getting to know chicks. No
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movies, no popcorn, no hangover and, with an off-line mail reader, no
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late hours. If things don't work out you insult the bitch and put her
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in a twit filter. Life is good!
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She lived in Minerva Park and I had a place in Westerville. We met
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halfway. I wanted to be there first so I told her 6:30. At 5:30 I
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found a quiet booth along the wall facing the door and ordered a
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hamburger. It was greasy-spoon quality, and cheap. I'd never been in
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the place. It had been her suggestion. Just a place she saw once in
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a while when she drove by, she'd said. While I sat and watched two
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girls came in. Tight jeans, short jackets, that hard-soft look.
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Trouble revving up for the night. They caught me and flashed teeth
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and shoulder swivels at me. Makes a guy feel good, even if he's got
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other fish to fry. I curled my tongue at them. One snarled her face
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up and jerked her head away. The other winked. Women!
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Maggy hadn't given me a description. She said she'd come in and catch
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a stool and check me out. She liked to play games. She'd done that
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with me on the board. I had the feeling she'd met a few guys this
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way, too, but I wasn't interested in her purity. When she walked in
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I knew it was her.
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She paused just inside the glass door, looking around the place. She
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spotted the three empty stools at the counter, marked her place with
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bright hazel eyes and re-scanned the room. Her eyes found mine. A
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satisfied smile threatened to break out, the corners of her mouth
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twitching. She'd made me, too. Something electrical flew across the
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room and hit me below the belt. I actually gulped.
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She wasn't beautiful but when she crossed the distance between us I
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wasn't the only one watching her bounce inside her clothes.
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She stood at the edge of the table, her hand held out, saying "Lee?"
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I took her hand and held the fingers between mine. I'd seen it in a
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movie and used it ever since. They liked it. "What happened to the
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stool gambit?" I asked, dazzling her with a smile.
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She returned it, letting her's spread past her eyes and into my soul.
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She had to know she had a great smile. She slid into the seat across
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from me, stuffed her bag against the wall and focused her full
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attention on me. She made me feel like I was the only man in the
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place. Everything about her said 'alive and planning on staying that
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way for ever'.
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I don't remember what we talked about, if anything. I do remember
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walking out of that place 2 hours and five or six cups of coffee
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later. I remember putting her in her car, closing the door thinking
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'I want you!' I remember thinking and feeling that so much that she
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got out of the car again, wrapped her arms around me and cleaned my
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tonsils for me.
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I logged on as soon as I got home and left her a steamy message. I
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wanted my hands on her more than anything in the world. There was
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a message from her to me, posted while we were still in the
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restaurant, which read "A loaf of bread, a jug of wine, and thou..."
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That was it. A chill crept up my spine. I dreamed of her eyes and
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the curve of her mouth every night for a week.
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Every night there were messages for me. Every morning I left replies
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for her. At the end of the second week I started the fight. She had
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alluded to her political beliefs a few times, but didn't seem to have
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much passion for a fight. I could care less about any of it, but I
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needed a prod and thought politics might do it. After the first
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heated words I called her at home and told her I had to see her.
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She named a park on the other side of the city, saying she'd bring
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lunch and a blanket. She told me to bring the crow. "And bring
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your appetite!" she hissed, slamming the receiver down.
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I knew the park. I waited in the parking lot, remembering the last
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time I'd been there. That had been the blonde. She'd gone down with
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her eyes scrunched tight shut, screaming. A real fun date. I'd had
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trouble hearing for three days. I was lost in the memory when Maggie
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rapped on the window. When I got out of the car and took the basket
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from her she saw how excited I was and thought it was for her. A
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great reaction and I hadn't even planned it.
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"Oh, Lee," she said. "I thought..." she shrugged, bouncing softly.
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"Look, I'm sorry." I touched her throat with one finger, looking deep
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into her eyes.
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She smiled, jarring my soul again. "Where do you want to go?"
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"Heaven?" Right then I thought I might make it.
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"To eat? To talk? To touch," she said, taking my hand. I remember
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thinking she was considering taking me wherever I wanted to go.
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"They were just words," I said after the blanket was spread on the
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grass, after she'd pulled out a bottle of wine and two plastic
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champagne glasses, after a loaf of crusty French bread had appeared.
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"Hush," and she touched a finger tip to my lips.
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I hadn't believed she was going to be this easy. I wanted her then,
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there in the sunlight under the trees. I wanted her bad and it looked
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like she could be real bad when she wanted to be. I held her and
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whispered against her ear. I stroked her arms and kissed her. She
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nuzzled against me and listened to my voice. She asked if I wanted
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her. She pouted when I told her I wasn't prepared. She teased me and
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made me wish I'd moved faster. She made a game out of it, playing
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against the hunger she said she could feel.
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"I'd like to get under your skin," she confided in a whisper. "I'd
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like to get into your head." She chuckled against my chest.
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I started laying it out in my mind right then. She was going to be so
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good. She might be that something special. 'Yeah, this could be the
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one,' I'd thought. I made promises to her as the sun set. We laid
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plans to make our dreams come true the next time we met. I swore I'd
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be prepared.
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She put both of her hands on my chest, looked into my eyes and smiled
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that special smile. She almost purred when she said, "And I'll be
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ready for you."
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I considered an unplanned encounter. I'll admit it. She had me that
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worked up. The first girl I'd ever taken had been unplanned. I'd had
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to leave that town because of it. Six years later and more than a
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thousand miles away I almost forgot the uproar that had caused.
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As Maggie rolled across the blanket to put the empty wine bottle in
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the basket a car rolled by, reminding me where I was. I didn't
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know whether to cuss that car or bless it. I still don't.
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Two days later I attacked her on another political issue. I told her
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she was politically naive and socially incompetent. I told her not to
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post to me again. I didn't twit her. I watched her rant for a week.
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I dreamed intense dreams every night, waking up sweating, calling out
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her name. I was ready.
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"You Jerk!" she raved at me when I called her. "How can you even think
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I'd talk to you after what you said?" I could hear her breathing hard
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in her anger.
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"Because I think you love me," I told her.
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There was silence on the other end of the line. I waited. I thought I
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heard footsteps. Maybe she'd thrown the receiver down and walked
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away. This was part of it. I had to have this, too. The uncertainty,
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the suspense, the possibility that I might not get what I wanted.
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"Excuse me?" she said. She sounded out of breath. I could imagine
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her going to the window and taking deep breaths or hopping on her
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stationary bike and doing a few miles.
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"I think I love you," I said.
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"Lee! You're nuts!" She slammed down the phone.
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I waited. I had a cup of coffee. I played a few games of solitaire
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and watched the cards roll down the screen. I had a sudden urge to
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log onto the BBS and see if she was up to something. A thousand ideas
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rolled through my head. I called back.
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"Maggie? Can we try again? Can we meet? Can I..love you?"
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"What's the matter, Hot Shot? Is your social calendar a blank this
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week?"
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"Ah, Maggie! Don't do me that way," I pleaded.
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"We'll see how long you can stay committed to this," she said. "You
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give me some decent messages and try not to humiliate me for a week
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and I might, just might, believe you."
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"I can't, Maggie. My hard drive crashed this morning," I lied.
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Again the silence. The receiver clicked. I smiled. She hadn't
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slammed it down. This was almost as good as the real thing.
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I waited an hour. I took a shower. I listened to the radio. "The
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reasons don't hear the Reaper, nor do the wind the sun or the rain.
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Ah, come on, baby..." I sang, laughing. Oh, I was so ready!
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On the third call I woke her, she said.
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"Don't you dream of me, Maggie?" I asked.
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"Every night, Lee," she breathed.
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"Meet me at midnight, Maggie," I begged. "I know a place. The night's
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warm. Bring a blanket and thou. I'll bring the wine."
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She laughed wildly. I could almost hear her thinking. A chill crept
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up my spine. For a minute I almost called it off. She was something
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else.
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"You better be prepared to reap what you've sewn," she warned,
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purring.
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"I am!" I promised.
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When she stepped out of her car I said, "Hot damn!" She'd put on a
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summer dress. Her neck and shoulders were bare. She'd put her hair up
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with little curls hanging around her face. She looked great. Those
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eyes hazel eyes shone with energy and life. I ran to her and grabbed
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her up, swinging her around. She hung on and laughed. I hugged her
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tight to me.
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We held hands, arms swinging between us, as we walked up the gravel
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path to the overlook. A dense screen of trees blocked the view of
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the silent road behind us. I took the blanket from her and spread it
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out on the ground, sitting, holding my hand out to her to join me.
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She dropped to her knees in front of me, taking both sides of my face
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in her hands. She looked into my eyes, searching for something. She
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nodded just a little bit like she'd made up her mind. She kissed me
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then, putting everything she had into it. She reamed my tonsils, and
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cleaned, polished, and straightened my teeth. "Lee," she whispered,
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drawing back to look into my eyes, again.
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"Ah, Maggie," I breathed, pulling her down.
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She lay silently, looking up at me as I tugged the blanket around to
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make a pillow for her head. Her lips curved in a soft smile. I
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kissed her nose, her eyes, her brow. We locked eyes as I brought the
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edge of the blanket up, and stroked her cheek with it. Her breathing
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changed pace, matching mine. Caught up in my own need as I was, I
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noticed that, and wondered why no one else had ever done that.
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"I'll love you for the rest of your life," I told her.
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"And I'm going to love you for a long long time past that," she said.
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I rolled over on top of her. She smiled sweetly. I wrapped my
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fingers around her throat quickly, blanket between her skin and mine.
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Her smile deepened. She didn't struggle much. I applied pressure,
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looking into her, reaching out for that something special. Still,
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motionless long before she should be, her eyes glowed, a green
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reflection of something within. Her smile changed. A heat wave way
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past believing wrapped itself around me, surged through me, and found
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a place of its own. She laughed like she knew; like she'd put one
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over on *me*.
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My hands took on a life of their own, crushing her windpipe, grinding
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against the cartilage in her throat. She smiled wide, way past her
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eyes and into my soul. Her legs jerked beneath me. Her torso
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straightened suddenly. Something, something special happened.
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Something like a cat hooking its claws and dragging me into hell with
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it. I collapsed against her, listening for a heartbeat. There was
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nothing but the sudden pounding of my own, doubly loud in my ears.
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I would have left the body there, blanket wrapped around her throat,
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as I always did. Something else made me roll her up in the blanket
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and push her over the edge of the rise into the tall grass below. I
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watched myself do it, wondered why, and followed the urge anyway. I
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went to her car, pulled the tail of my shirt out and opened the door.
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The interior light glared. I stood staring at it for a few minutes,
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questioning myself, before I got into my own car and drove into the
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warm night.
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I realized I was in a daze of some kind when the waiter asked, with
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some surprise, "You want two cups of coffee?" I was in the same diner
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where I'd first met her.
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"Maggie's goin' meet me here," I told him.
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"Maggie," he repeated. "Uh-huh. She's something else. Let me know if
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you ever figure out what." He looked at me like I had spinach stuck
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in my teeth, frowning. "What's a matter with you?"
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"I don't know. I haven't been myself since last time I saw her."
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============================== # # # ===========================
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Copyright 1994 Gay L. Bost
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Gay is a Clinical Lab Tech with experience in Veterinary medicine.
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Originally from NORTHERN California, she has resided in Southeast Missouri
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with her husband and an aggressive 6 year old boy, since 1974. She
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installed her first modem in the summer of 1992 and has been exploring new
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worlds since. Her first and only publication, a short horror story, came
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when she was 17 years old. The success was so overwhelming she called an
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end to her writing days and went in search of herself. She's still looking.
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You will find Gay's work in the best Electronic Magazines.
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